Mothers’ and fathers’ social support trajectories and children’s prosocial development: A dyadic perspective
Olivia D. ChangAbstract
The current study examined mothers’ and fathers’ dyadic trajectories of perceived social support and their associations with children’s prosociality. Data were drawn from 4,329 children (52% male, 48% female; 44% Black, 22% Hispanic, 17% White) in a prospective birth cohort study of low-income families. Repeated-measures latent class analysis identified three trajectories of social support at the level of the mother–father dyad from birth to age five: “High and Concordant” (64%), “Paternal-Advantaged, Declining Maternal” (20%), and “Maternal-Advantaged” (16%) social support. Child prosocial behavior differed significantly across dyadic social support trajectories. Children of parents in the “Paternal-Advantaged, Declining Maternal” ( M = –0.06, SE = 0.20; p < .001) and “Maternal-Advantaged” ( M = –0.26, SE = 0.19; p < .001) social support trajectories scored significantly lower on prosocial behavior at age five than those with “High and Concordant” social support ( M = 0.37, SE = 0.04). These differences persisted at age nine for children of parents in the “Paternal-Advantaged, Declining Maternal” social support trajectory. Findings suggest that consistent and adequate social support within the parental dyad is critical to cultivating children’s prosocial skills.